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ExUrbanis

Urban Leaving to Country Living

Crazy for CanLit

August19

The folks who run Canada’s Scotiabank Giller Prize have released a list of the CanLit books published during the past year, thereby making them eligible to be 2016 prize winners. They’ve encouraged one and all to make “Crazy for CanLit” lists.

This list – books by authors I’ve read before – is the only one I’m going to publish on my blog. You can find eight more on my Pinterest boards.


2016 CRAZY FOR CANLIT AUTHORS I’VE READ BEFORE

1. Gail Anderson-Dargatz
The Spawning Grounds by Gail Anderson-Dargatz photo spawning grounds_zps4pka87pu.jpg
In August 2012 I read Anderson-Dargatz’s sweet story, A Recipe for Bees.

This new novel, The Spawning Grounds, by the two-time Giller-shortlisted author, is “an intimate family saga rooted in the Thompson-Shuswap region of British Columbia, and saturated with the history of the place. A bold new story that bridges Native and white cultures across a bend in a river where the salmon run.”

2. Alan Bradley
Thrice the Brinded Cat Hath Mew'd by Alan Bradley photo thrice the brinded cat_zpsnwkz47g4.jpg

Bradley is the creator of Flavia deLuce, the intelligent, feisty, funny, and down-to-earth pre-teen budding chemist who solves mysteries in her village in rural England in the early 1950s.

I’ve read every book in this series, and I won’t be missing Thrice the Brinded Cat Hath Mew’d either.

 

3. George Elliott Clarke
The Motorcyclist by George Elliott Clarke photo motorcyclist_zpsrgre7lwa.jpg

Back in my pre-blogging days I read both Execution Poems (poetry) and George & Rue (prose), accounts of Clarke’s mother’s cousins who were executed for killing a man in 1940s New Brunswick.

This new book, The Motorcyclist, was inspired by the life of Clarke’s father, set in and around Halifax, Nova Scotia. “In vibrant, energetic, sensual prose, George Elliott Clarke brilliantly illuminates the life of a young black man striving for pleasure, success and, most of all, respect.”

 

4. Emma Donaghue
The Wonder by Emma Donaghue photo wonder_zpso7vvifqd.jpgWho hasn’t read Donaghue’s great novel-turned-movie Room? The summer I read it, many of my friends were saying they couldn’t read it because they were afraid it would be too dark.
But, on the contrary, this is a book about the indomitability of the human spirit, the capacity to adapt, and the power of love.

Her new book, The Wonder, is about a village in 1850s Ireland where a little girl appears to be thriving after months without food. The story of this ‘wonder’ has reached fever pitch.

 

5. Joy Fielding
She's Not There by Joy Fielding photo shes not there_zpsjysxctoh.jpg

I’m amazed to see from my records that I’ve read four of Fielding’s books: Grand Avenue, The Other Woman, Lost, and See Jane Run, all in pre-blogging days.

Her 2016 entry, She’s Not There, is about a woman who, fifteen years after her infant daughter was kidnapped in Mexico, is contacted by a girl claiming to be her long-lost daughter.

 

6. John Irving

Avenue of Mysteries by John Irving photo avenue of mysteries_zpsxbz72zys.jpg

I’ve read five of John Irving’s novels over the years. Nearly all were set in New England so his 2016 offering Avenue of Mysteries sounds a little different.

Avenue of Mysteries is the story of what happens to Juan Diego in the Philippines, where what happened to him in the past–in Mexico–collides with his future.”

Will wrestling or bears make their appearance?

 

7. Maureen Jennings

Dead Ground In Between by Maureen Jennings photo dead ground in between_zpsrpwdjqlg.jpgJennings is probably best known as the author of the series featuring Detective Murdoch, set in nineteenth century Toronto, Ontario. The books are the basis for the popular television series The Murdoch Mysteries.

In addition to the first in that series, I’ve read Does Your Mother Know?, the first installment in Jennings’ Christine Morris series.

Dead Ground In Between is the fourth entry in her D.I. Tom Tyler series, set in WWII Britain. I haven’t sampled this series yet but it’s said to be a “must-read for fans of Foyle’s War, Jacqueline Winspear’s Maisie Dobbs series, and wartime dramas.”

 

8. Margot Livesey
Mercury by Margot Livesey photo mercury_zpsq502b2rg.jpg

Hmmm . . . Scottish by birth, American by residence, Livesey must use a Canadian publisher, else why would she be on this list?

I’ve read The Flight of Gemma Hardy, a modern retelling of Jane Eyre.

Mercury is said to be “a taut emotional thriller about love, obsession and the secrets that pull a family apart.” Mercury is a horse.

 

9. Yann Martel
The High Mountains of Portugal by Yann Martel photo high mountains_zps7byaluo3.jpg

How does one follow up such a smashing success as Life of Pi, which I read in my pre-blogging days?

The High Mountains of Portugal is a suspenseful, mesmerizing story of a great quest for meaning, told in three intersecting narratives touching the lives of three different people and their families, and taking us on an extraordinary journey through the last century.”

 

10. Stuart McLean
Vinyl Cafe Turns the Page by Stuart McLean photo vinyl cafe_zpsyvgbhmqq.jpg

Most Canadians are familiar with Stuart McLean who is a regular voice on CBC Radio’s Vinyl Café. McLean is a superb storyteller, weaving magical tales about the everyday lives of Dave & Morley and their kids Stephanie & Sam.

But “Dave and Morley are growing older; Steph and Sam are growing up. Moving out and moving on. In this brand new collection of Vinyl Cafe stories, The Vinyl Cafe Turns the Page, the more things change, the more things stay the same.”

 

11. Donna Morrisey
The Fortunate Brother by Donna Morrissey photo fortunate brother_zpstwcdbgly.jpg

I love Donna Morrissey’s books and have read the first three: Kit’s Law, Downhill Chance, and Sylvanus Now, all before I started blogging.

That puts me a couple of books behind before I attend her book signing for The Fortunate Brother at the Fables Retreat in Tatamagouche on September 24th.

The Fortunate Brother continues the story of the Now family: Sylvanus & his wife and their children.

 

12. Kate Taylor
Serial Monogamy by Kate Taylor photo serial monogamy_zpsao5t3tch.jpg

I thoroughly enjoyed Taylor’s second novel, A Man in Uniform, about the infamous Dreyfuss affair in late nineteenth century France.

I’m looking forward to reading this latest offering A Serial Monogamy, which features a woman writing “a serialized novel based on the story of the 19th-century actress Nelly Ternan, the young mistress of the aging Charles Dickens. (The) novel shifts between Sharon’s Toronto and Nelly’s Victorian England.”

 

13. Russell Wangersky
The Path of Most Resistance by Russell Wangersky photo path of most resistance_zpsg9ru5xal.jpg

I first became aware of Wangersky when I heard him read at the 2014 Read by the Sea festival in River John, Nova Scotia. I promptly read his novel The Glass Harmonica, and the collection of short stores WhirlAway which was shortlisted for the 2012 Giller Prize.

The publicity for The Path of Most Resistance says it “is an observant and compassionate look at the feelings of powerlessness that we all share, and will have readers silently cringing and nodding in recognition of their own bad behaviour.”

 

14. Inger Ash Wolfe
The Night Bell by Inger Ash Wolfe photo night bell_zpsnfsgvn53.jpg
I read The Calling, first in the series introducing Hazel Micaleff, in charge of a provincial police detachment 3 hours north of Toronto, in 2012. I had trouble putting it down and rated it four stars which is high praise for me for a serial killer novel. It’s been made into a film starring Susan Sarandon.

The Night Bell, the fourth in the series, is said to be the author’s best yet. I think this is a series best read in order.

 

15. Richard B. Wright
Nightfall by Richard B. Wright photo nightfall_zpseb54tivs.jpg

Of course I’ve read Wright’s masterpiece Clara Callan, which won three major Canadian literary awards, including the Giller Prize. I’ve also read October and Mr. Shakespeare’s Bastard, neither of which had any chance of living up to the beauty of Clara Callan.

In Wright’s new book, Nightfall, James Hillyer, a retired university professor tracks down the woman he fell in love with so many years ago on a summer trip to Quebec.

 

16. Alissa York

The Naturalist by Alissa York photo naturalist_zpsnl9umxba.jpg

I’ve read York’s Fauna, which imagines a sanctuary for injured wildlife, hidden in the Don Valley in the middle of Toronto, Ontario, Canada’s largest city.

The Naturalist concerns an 1867 trip by amateurs up the Amazon River.

Isn’t this a gorgeous cover? You can find out what other covers in the list I thought worthy of note, on my “Cool Covers” Pinterest board.

 

* * * * *

I’d like to read most of the books on this list, but my MUST-READS: Wangersky, Morrissey and Bradley. How about you?

 

P.S. Although most links in this post will take you to my past reviews, any links that take you to Amazon or The Book Depository are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff
18 Comments to

“Crazy for CanLit”

  1. On August 19th, 2016 at 2:18 pm Buried In Print Says:

    Great list! From these choices, my must-reads would be Alissa York’s, George Elliott Clarke’s, and I would’ve said Russell Wangersky but, no, The Calling! Because I’ve picked it up a couple of times this year but didn’t realize just how much you enjoyed it, so now I have that fresh “now!” feeling about the idea and I’ve been craving a mystery anyway. But, as you know, I actually want to read quite a few of these. (Just finished Serial Monogamy actually: loved it.)

  2. On August 19th, 2016 at 2:37 pm Debbie Says:

    Marcie, I’m glad to hear that you loved Kate Taylor’s newest book. She was on my “next three” pick list. 😉

    And so would George Elliott Clarke be. (I always remember how to spell his name: two “L”s, two “T”s, and Clarke with an “E” because that’s how he writes – with everything in and with a flourish.)

    I’m not sure just yet who my third pick would be – so many great choices!

  3. On August 19th, 2016 at 2:31 pm Julia Says:

    I’ve been afraid Room would be too dark for me also, but your review makes me want to reconsider. And since I just said in my post today that I love books that show triumph of the human spirit, I should just go ahead and add it to the TBR. Thanks!

  4. On August 19th, 2016 at 2:46 pm Debbie Says:

    You’re quite welcome, Julia. I hope you enjoy it!

  5. On August 19th, 2016 at 3:55 pm raidergirl3 Says:

    So many good authors! I’ve loved the Inger Ash Wolfe series – just finished The Night Bell. Keep reading!

    I didn’t realize John Irving was Canadian?
    I’ve enjoyed a couple Wangersky books, and I agree about Clara Callen! A most excellent book, but he hasn’t hit the magic in his other books.
    I’m already first line for Wonder – I’ve loved many of Donaghue’s books.

  6. On August 19th, 2016 at 6:10 pm Debbie Says:

    I’ve only read Room, Raider Girl, but I’m game to try Wonder.

    In 1987 John Irving married Janet Turnbull, who was vice-president of the Canadian division of Bantam books. Turnbull later owned the literary agency Curtis Brown Canada – Irving was, for a time, her only client. So he’s published by a Canadian house – he qualifies, I guess the same way that Margot Livesey does. (Although I think Irving has spent quite a bit of time actually living in Canada.)

    One question about the Inger Ash Wolfe series: does the second book also feature a serial killer?

  7. On August 19th, 2016 at 9:25 pm Rita @ View From My Books Says:

    It’s so nice to see a list of Canadian authors and titles (well, multiple lists, even better). The U.S. market is egocentric about its own, plus many British authors, but overlook Canadians much of the time. I’m happy to report that I’ve heard of several of your selections just on this list– read Joy Fielding many times, want to try Maureen Jennings, and am going to check out your Pinterest boards now for even more choices. Thanks for sharing these with us!

  8. On August 20th, 2016 at 10:01 am Debbie Says:

    Rita, I’ve noticed that about American book marketing and, for many years, the Canadian book market. It was only about 1967, with Canada’s centennial, that CanLit began to be celebrated. I have lots of lists of CanLit on my blog – and many, many personal recommendations. For example, my July 19th post – 10 books set in Atlantic Canada that I’ve rated 4, 4½, or 5 stars.

    Welcome to Exurbanis!

  9. On August 20th, 2016 at 5:16 am Martine Frampton Says:

    Loved Emma Donoghue, had not realised she was Canadian. Would also highly recommend Kissing the Witch by her. Thanks for your recommendations.

  10. On August 20th, 2016 at 10:03 am Debbie Says:

    Martine, according to Emma’s blog, she’s now based in London, Ontario (Canada of course), although she visits her home country of Ireland often. Thank you for the recommendation – I will add it to my TBR list!

  11. On August 21st, 2016 at 12:51 pm Judy Krueger Says:

    Canada sure produces great authors! My must reads are the Emma Donohue, the John Irving, and I need to check out Joy Fielding soon!
    Also in October comes Hagseed, Margaret Atwood’s retelling of The Tempest! Can’t wait for that.

  12. On August 21st, 2016 at 4:24 pm Debbie Says:

    I’m betting that this Emma Donaghue is going to be big, Judy.

    I didn’t know that Margaret Atwood was doing one of the Shakespeare retellings. I’m not crazy about Atwood but this series intrigues me.

  13. On August 23rd, 2016 at 12:51 pm Vicki Says:

    Most are ones I’ve never heard of before. I’m going to add a few to my tbr list.

  14. On August 23rd, 2016 at 2:57 pm Debbie Says:

    There’s a lot I hadn’t heard of either, Vicki, but they are new, so maybe we’ll see them around soon.

  15. On August 23rd, 2016 at 2:30 pm Katie @ Doing Dewey Says:

    There are a number of books on this list that I’m interested in, but I didn’t know any of them were by Canadian authors. It’s hard to know how to categorize international authors like Livesey!

  16. On August 23rd, 2016 at 5:00 pm Debbie Says:

    Even though some are hard to call, Katie, I still wouldn’t categorize Livesey as Canadian. Irving lived a lot in Toronto, I think, after he married a Canadian, but they also spent time in Vermont.

    The others, I think, are pretty clearly Canadian.

  17. On August 23rd, 2016 at 9:22 pm Deb Nance at Readerbuzz Says:

    I need to read more Canadian fiction!

  18. On August 25th, 2016 at 11:42 am Debbie Says:

    I’m ready with recommendations, Deb!

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